Free play sessions will be held at one of the country's most famous Anglo-Saxon archaeological sites. From March, the National Trust is opening up its Sutton Hoo site, near Woodbridge, in Suffolk, for ...
Three families supported by East Anglia’s Children’s Hospices (EACH) were treated to an outdoor performance of Hamlet at Sutton Hoo as part of the annual Theatre in the Forest series. The event, ...
Discovered in 1939, the Sutton Hoo ship burial revealed one of the greatest archaeological finds in British history. Beneath ...
In July, 1937, Edith Pretty, a wealthy widow and local magistrate, attended a flower show in Woodbridge, a picturesque, red-brick town on the Suffolk coast, in search of archeological advice. Pretty, ...
Over decades, archaeologists have gradually uncovered fragments of an ornate Byzantine-era bucket on the grounds of Sutton Hoo in Suffolk, the U.K. The latest piece to turn up, however, is radically ...
A suitcase belonging to the landowner who played a prime role in the discovery of the Sutton Hoo burial ship gives an insight into her "status and character as a woman in Edwardian England". Sutton ...
An ancient stamp unearthed by a metal detectorist suggests the Sutton Hoo was actually made in Denmark, and not Sweden as previously thought. The Anglo-Saxon helmet, dated to the 7th century, is one ...